Tomb of St. Philip the Apostle discovered in Turkey's Denizli | General | World Bulletin: "The tomb of St. Philip the Apostle, one of the original 12 disciples of Christianity's central figure Jesus Christ, has been discovered during the ongoing excavations in Turkey's south-western province of Denizli.Italian professor Francesco D'Andria, the head of the excavation team at the Hierapolis ancient city in Denizli, told reporters on Tuesday that experts had reached the tomb of St. Philip whose name is mentioned in the Bible as one of the 12 Apostles of Jesus.Professor D'Andria said archeologists had been working for years to find the tomb of the Biblical figure, and finally, they had managed to reach the monument while working on the ruins of a newly-unearthed church in Hierapolis.D'Andria said the structure of the tomb and the writings on it proved that it belonged to St. Philip the Apostle, who is recognized as a martyr in the history of Christianity.Describing the discovery as a major development both for archeology and the Christian world, D'Andria said the tomb, which had not been opened yet, was expected to become an important Christian pilgrimage destination."

Everyone who knows me even a little knows how much I love Scripture and the history of the Early Church. That is why I get excited about news about biblical people and places.

I have a goal (almost completed) to visit the tombs of all the biblical characters. Today a new discovery was announced …

… the tomb of the Apostle St. Philip.

“On Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 the Turkish news agency Anadolu reported that archeologists had unearthed the Tomb of Saint Philip during excavations in the Turkish city of Hierapolis. The Italian professor Francesco D’Andria stated that scientists had discovered the tomb, within a newly revealed church. He stated that the design of the Tomb, and writings on its walls, definitively prove it belonged to the martyred Apostle of Jesus.” (Wikipedia).

The Archbishop of Leon, Mexico is calling on Catholics to dress modestly at Mass.

"If you have any respect for this place (a church), dress appropriately," Archbishop Jose Guadalupe Martin Rabago told reporters after Mass on July 24.

Criticism of the archbishop's comments came after local newspapers featured photos of posters at some parishes in Leon that said, "Respect God's house. Don't come dressed like this." The posters said women should not come to church dressed in miniskirts, sleeveless shirts, or low-cut blouses.

According to the newspaper Correo, the archbishop said women ought to know what they should wear and when.

"They know that for a wedding or a quinceanera they should dress one way, and for a trip to the beach they should dress another."

World Youth Day organizers said July 25 that the independent catechesis sessions offered by U.S.-based media producer Michael Voris during World Youth Day 2011 are not approved by the event. Voris responded with puzzlement that the announcement was made, stating that his organization has never represented itself as linked to the event.

"Participants in the World Youth Day 2011 Cultural Program must be recognized and endorsed by the bishops and episcopal conferences of their respective countries," read a July 25 statement from the event's organizers.

There had been "some confusion" about Voris' affiliation with World Youth Day, organizers said, further noting that "Real Catholic TV" and Michael Voris' catechetical session "No Bull in Madrid" have not received endorsements from the group's local bishop-Archbishop Allen Vigneron of Detroit-or the U.S. bishops' conference.

They are "not in any way recognized or approved" by the official event. The Pontifical Council for the Laity selects and invites only bishops from around the world to conduct catechesis sessions at World Youth Day, the statement explained.

An expert on Chinese Christianity says the country's religious authorities are threatening the Catholic Church's basic identity by defying a series of excommunications and planning more illicit ordinations.

"All this is the independent, prideful nationalism of China, which many Chinese people can easily fall into - even Catholic bishops, I suppose," said Dr. Nathan Faries, author of "The 'Inscrutably Chinese' Church" and a professor of English at the University of Dubuque.

China's State Administration for Religious Affairs rebuked the Vatican on July 25, calling the "so-called excommunication" of two unapproved bishops "unreasonable and rude." A bureau spokesperson told the Vatican to withdraw the penalties, saying Chinese Catholics would travel "the path of 'independent, autonomous and self-governing' Church principle and 'self-election and self-ordination' of bishops."

"I hear a lot of the Communist Party, a lot of the State Administration for Religious Affairs in those words, and not a lot of faithful Catholicism," Faries told CNA recently. "When you take this to the logical conclusion, it ceases to be Catholicism."

The state agency issued its comments three days after China's state-backed Catholic Patriotic Association announced plans to ordain seven more bishops without papal approval - adding to the three ordinations that have taken place without the papal mandate since November 2010.

Faries, a convert from Protestantism to Catholicism, is deeply concerned about the breakdown in relations between Beijing and the Holy See after a period of improvement. His book on Chinese Christianity came about through his experience traveling, teaching, and living in the country, where he found many "very faithful clergy" in both underground and state-approved settings.

The U.S. Helsinki Commission gathered on July 22 to discuss the increase in violence against Coptic Orthodox Christians in Egypt, specifically young women.

Reports of kidnapping and forced marriage and conversion began cropping up in 2007, but remained "unsubstantiated," said Michele Clark, an adjunct professor of international affairs at George Washington University.

Clark and other witnesses testified July 22 before the independent U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. The commission is also known as the Helsinki Commission because it is tasked with monitoring compliance with the Helsinki Accords, a 1976 agreement between 56 countries that involves cooperation on issues related to human rights, democracy, economics and security.

Jean Maher, president of the France-based Egyptian Union for Human Rights Organization, said that nearly 800 Coptic Christian women have been kidnapped, raped and forced to convert to Islam since 2009.

That number has only increased since the revolution in February, Maher said.

He said that before the revolution, Muslim kidnappers would have to "seduce" their victims. Now, they "just put them in a taxi and go away with them."

China's state-backed Patriotic Catholic Association will ordain more bishops without papal approval when "conditions are right," a top leader in the organization said.

Bishop Joseph Guoa Jincai of Chengde, vice-chairman of the group, told the state-run China Daily newspaper that local churches are preparing for the ordinations of bishops in seven dioceses.

He did not provide a schedule for the ordinations, saying preliminary work is "complicated" and involves various parties. Candidates must submit applications to the local commission of religious affairs for approval, while bishops from other dioceses have to coordinate schedules.

Fr. Joseph Huang Bingzhang was illicitly ordained as bishop of Shantou in China's southern Guangdong province on July 14.

In response, the Vatican declared that he incurred an automatic excommunication and lacks authority to govern the diocese.

Vatican expert Sandro Magister said Church authorities have "prudently" indicated that only the newly ordained have definitely incurred excommunication.

"For the consecrating bishops, they are suspending judgment until they ascertain whether they acted freely or under constraint," Magister said in his July 24 column on his website "Chiesa."

On July 26 the Roman Catholic Church commemorates the parents of the Virgin Mary, Saints Joachim and Anne. The couple's faith and perseverance brought them through the sorrow of childlessness, to the joy of conceiving and raising the immaculate and sinless woman who would give birth to Christ.

The New Testament contains no specific information about the lives of the Virgin Mary's parents, but other documents outside of the Biblical canon do provide some details. Although these writings are not considered authoritative in the same manner as the Bible, they outline some of the Church's traditional beliefs about Joachim, Anne and their daughter.

The "Protoevangelium of James," which was probably put into its final written form in the early second century, describes Mary's father Joachim as a wealthy member of one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Joachim was deeply grieved, along with his wife Anne, by their childlessness. "He called to mind Abraham," the early Christian writing says, "that in the last day God gave him a son Isaac."

Today is the feast of one of our favorite Doctors of the Church, St. Lawrence of Brindisi. The Church refers to him as the Apostolic Doctor. He lived in turbulent times but he put his immense gifts of learning at the service of Christ and His Church and he gained much fruit. The Protestants were convinced by his depth of knowledge of Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers; the Jews were impressed to see his knowledge of the Bible in its original languages and of their own rabbinic traditions. His preaching and teaching were grounded in a profound life of prayer. Even the worldly and powerful sought him out for advice.

The Diocese of Saltillo, Mexico has responded to protests by an unidentified group who recently urged the diocese to replace current Bishop Raul Vera Lopez.

The July 15 statement was signed by Father Gerardo Escareno and titled, "The activity of the Bishop is not outside the bounds of the Gospel."

Last week protest messages were hung on the railing that surrounds the Cathedral of Saltillo. They were taken down the same day, but not by diocesan or church employees, reported the Mexican daily Vanguardia. Bishop Vera has come under fire in recent months for his connection to a homosexual ministry that does not follow Church teaching.

Fr. Escaareno's statement published on the website of the Mexican bishops' conference says: "The pastoral work of the diocesan bishop, which encompasses a wide variety of areas of the life of the Church and of society, is clearly spelled out in the teachings and pastoral norms of the Church."

He later states that Bishop Vera's actions "are not outside the bounds of the Gospel or the norms and guidelines of the Church, or the challenges of the society in which we live."

Catholics in South Sudan are mourning the loss of Bishop Caesar Mazzolari of Rumbek, who died at the age of 74 while concelebrating Mass on July 16.

The Rumbek diocese said local faithful are "shocked and deeply saddened" by the Italian bishop's death, and expressed its "heartfelt appreciation of his dedicated service and lifelong faithful witness to the Gospel among the people of South Sudan."

Bishop Mazzolari had a seizure at an early morning Mass on Saturday. Witnesses say he stumbled back onto a chair during the consecration and grabbed his chest while gasping for air.

After being taken to the State Hospital in Rumbek, he was pronounced dead at 8 a.m.

Bishop Mazzolari was known for his outspoken stance against warfare and for championing the rights of Sudan's poor and marginalized. The bishop also advocated for increased education and health care and was seen as pivotal in promoting dialogue and reconciliation across the 10 states of South Sudan.

"Evangelization was at the heart of his ministry which was nourished by his commitment to a deep life of prayer," read the July 16 diocesan statement.

"Like St Paul, Bishop Mazzolari spent his life at the service of the Gospel," the diocese added. "His fatherly care and compassion, generosity and selflessness were sources of hope and comfort to all those he encountered."

The bishop was born in 1937 in the Italian city of Brescia, later joined the Comboni Missionaries and was ordained a priest in 1962.

Catholic priests in Ireland are prepared to "strongly" resist a proposed law that would require them to disclose information learned in confession.

"More than any other issue, it is probably the one that will unite both the liberal and conservative wings of the Church," said Father Tony Flannery, a priest with the Association of Catholic Priests, in a July 18 e-mail to CNA.

"If even one exception was made to the seal of Confession, then the whole Sacrament would collapse," he stated. "The truth of faith that this Sacrament is meant to convey is central to Christian teaching."

The legislation, proposed by Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny, would put priests in jail for up to five years if they failed to tell authorities about sexual abuse crimes disclosed during confession.

Fr. Flannery said that the Association of Catholic Priests has not taken the proposed law very seriously, because it is simply not "workable."

A new in-depth report on Planned Parenthood by a pro-life group shows that American taxpayers give substantial amounts of money to the abortion provider each year.

"By Planned Parenthood's own accounting, $363 million - one-third of its budget annually - comes from the American taxpayer," said president of Americans United for Life Dr. Charmaine Yoest.

"While Congress is discussing going deeper in debt and raising the debt ceiling … our government is quietly subsidizing the world's largest abortion provider with $1 million a day."

Americans United for Life says its report, "The Case for Investigating Planned Parenthood," is the result of their legal team researching more than 20 years of Planned Parenthood records, law enforcement reports, and other materials.

The U.S. bishops' "Faithful Citizenship" document on Catholics' voting responsibilities should be revised to remove "loopholes" that allow Catholics to vote for pro-abortion politicians, two political commentators have said.

"Why should a Catholic voter feel the weighty obligation to oppose 'intrinsically evil acts' when the bishops themselves provide three different loopholes to put that concern aside?" asked Catholic Advocate president Deal Hudson and Catholic Advocate vice president Matt Smith in a July 14 statement.

Without changes, they warned, the document will provide Catholic voters "another carte blanche to cast their vote for any pro-abortion candidate they want."

The two writers focused on sections 34 to 37 from the 2008 version of "Faithful Citizenship," which is revised every four years.

One passage said a Catholic who rejects a candidate's "unacceptable position" may decide to vote for that candidate for "other morally grave reasons." This voting is permissible only for "truly grave moral reasons" and not to advance narrow interests or partisan preferences.

The Vatican has issued a statement noting that Father Joseph Huang Bingzhang, the latest bishop to be illicitly ordained in China, will face excommunication.

"The Reverend Joseph Huang Bingzhang, having been ordained without papal mandate and hence illicitly, has incurred the sanctions laid down by canon 1382 of the Code of Canon Law," the Vatican said in its July 16 statement.

"Consequently, the Holy See does not recognize him as Bishop of the Diocese of Shantou, and he lacks authority to govern the Catholic community of the Diocese."

Canon 1382 of the Catholic Church's Code of Canon Law states both a bishop who "without a pontifical mandate, consecrates a person as Bishop, and the one who receives the consecration from him, incur a latae sententiae (automatic) excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See."

Fr. Huang Bingzhang's ordination as bishop of Shantou in China's southern Guangdong province took place July 14.

As Rep. Michelle Bachmann faces scrutiny for ties with a Lutheran church that believes the Pope is the anti-Christ, Catholic League president Bill Donohue said the congresswoman herself isn't anti-Catholic.

Although it is "regrettable that there are still strains of anti-Catholicism in some Protestant circles," Donohue said, "we find no evidence of any bigotry on the part of Rep. Michele Bachmann."

Rep. Bachmann made headlines this week when The Atlantic linked the presidential candidate with the Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church in Stillwater, Minnesota.

The church community belongs to the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod - founded in 1850 with around 400,000 members today - which tightly adheres to the teachings of 16th century Protestant Reformation leader Martin Luther.

The synod's "Doctrinal Statement on the Antichrist" claims that the Bible has "revealed" that the "Roman Papacy" is the anti-Christ.

In her more recent monthly column devoted to Catholic issues from a Latino perspective, the assistant director of media relations at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops likened the legalization of same-sex marriage to a farcical decree that mandates that apples be called “oranges.”

“Marriage does not exist to publicly sanction just any kind of affective relationship, friendship or partnership between people of the same or different sex,” writes María del Mar Muñoz-Visoso. “Marriage is a society with very specific features and purposes.”

The Vatican's Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples says that a group of Chinese bishops are "presumed" to be excommunicated for participating in last month's illicit ordination, until they can provide any justification for a lesser penalty.

"There is a sufficient reason to ascertain that these bishops actually committed a grave act of indiscipline through the illegitimate episcopal ordination, and, thus, are presumed to have incurred the excommunication, unless the contrary is proved," the congregation stated in a decree made public by Fides news service on July 12.

In the same document, the congregation made it clear that Father Paul Lei Shiyin, consecrated as a bishop in the illicit June 29 ceremony, "has already incurred the latae sententiae (automatic) excommunication, which is further 'declared' publicly by the Holy See."

The congregation stressed that both Fr. Lei Shiyin, and the bishops involved in his consecration, must seek reconciliation with the Vatican

After a consecrated Host was accidentally dropped on the floor during Mass on June 19, Father John Echert placed it in water so that it could dissolve and intended later to pour the water into the sacrarium. Instead, part of the Host turned red, and the Host has yet to dissolve fully. The Archdiocese of St. Paul - Minneapolis is now investigating the phenomenon.

“I make no claims, and the archdiocese makes no claims, as to the likelihood of this being supernatural,” said Father Echert, pastor of St. Augustine and Holy Trinity Churches in South St. Paul. “But it is enough of a phenomenon, or unusual, that we will continue to examine this host.”

“I've never in my 24 years as a priest seen or been aware of a phenomenon where a consecrated Host placed in water turns to this bright-colored red and continues in what I would call the blood-red color,” he added.

Holy See Press Office Director Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J. spoke yesterday of the Pope's sadness and concern at the latest illegitimate episcopal ordination in China which, he said, damages "the unity of the universal Church".

Yesterday at Shantou in the region of Guandong Fr. Joseph Huang Bingzhang was ordained a bishop without pontifical mandate. A similar episode took place on 29 June when Fr. Paul Lei Shiyin was ordained as bishop of Leshan. A number of bishops who are in communion with the Pope were obliged to attend yesterday's ceremony.

Following the Leshan ordination, the Holy See released a declaration highlighting how a bishop ordained "without the papal mandate, and hence illegitimately, has no authority to govern the diocesan Catholic community, and the Holy See does not recognise him as the bishop of that diocese".

On July 26 the Roman Catholic Church commemorates the parents of the Virgin Mary, Saints Joachim and Anne. The couple's faith and perseverance brought them through the sorrow of childlessness, to the joy of conceiving and raising the immaculate and sinless woman who would give birth to Christ.

The New Testament contains no specific information about the lives of the Virgin Mary's parents, but other documents outside of the Biblical canon do provide some details. Although these writings are not considered authoritative in the same manner as the Bible, they outline some of the Church's traditional beliefs about Joachim, Anne and their daughter.

The "Protoevangelium of James," which was probably put into its final written form in the early second century, describes Mary's father Joachim as a wealthy member of one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Joachim was deeply grieved, along with his wife Anne, by their childlessness. "He called to mind Abraham," the early Christian writing says, "that in the last day God gave him a son Isaac."

Joachim and Anne began to devote themselves to rigorous prayer and fasting, in isolation from one another and from society. They regarded their inability to conceive a child as a surpassing misfortune, and a sign of shame among the tribes of Israel.

As it turned out, however, the couple were to be blessed even more abundantly than Abraham and Sarah. An angel revealed this to Anne when he appeared to her and prophesied that all generations would honor their future child: "The Lord has heard your prayer, and you shall conceive, and shall bring forth; and your seed shall be spoken of in all the world."

New York state Senator Mark Grisanti ran as a Catholic Republican opponent of same-sex "marriage" in 2010. In June 2011, he became a key vote ensuring its passage, telling a local newspaper: "If I take the Catholic out of me, which is hard to do, then absolutely they should have these rights."

Richard E. Barnes, Executive Director of the New York Catholic Conference, said Grisanti showed a lack of integrity as a Catholic by "ignoring" the "teachings he knows full well" on the subject of family life.

"Obviously, he's acknowledging that he does understand the Catholic position," Barnes said to CNA on July 8. Grisanti seemed to be "making the assessment that, while it was 'hard to do,' he has 'taken the Catholic out of him' for the purposes of this vote.""I don't think that a public official should ever 'take the Catholic out' of himself or herself, because Catholic positions are meshed perfectly with public policy positions," said Barnes, who directs public policy advocacy efforts for the New York bishops.

"No person should say that they are a public official and need not live according to the tenets of their faith. And I find it disappointing that he felt he had to do that."When Sen. Grisanti cast his vote in favor of legalizing gay "marriage," he stated that he could not "deny anyone in my district and across New York the same rights I have with my wife."

A year after assuming duties as pontifical delegate for the Legion of Christ, Cardinal Velasio De Paolis gave a speech evaluating the current situation of the religious congregation. He sharply criticized "dissidents" within the order who create division and internal tensions.

Cardinal De Paolis gave a "provisional assessment" of the task of rebuilding the order in a July 3 speech delivered at the Legion's Center for Higher Learning in Rome. He explained that the order has already implemented "one-third" of the preparations to be completed before the Legion's general chapter meeting.

The meeting could be held as soon as 2013.

Leaders of the order are expected to then vote on major changes and revisions to the Legion's constitutions.

"This period has provided an opportunity for greater serenity within the congregation and for a strengthening of renewed fidelity of the members to the congregation," the cardinal explained.

"While it is true that in 2010 the institute suffered its greatest losses, it is also true that the exodus has been contained with regard to priests," he said.

However, regarding the abandonment of the order by its youngest members, Cardinal De Paolis noted "the negative influence exercised by some companions who, upon entering the process of renewal, have adopted an absolutely critical attitude towards the path of renewal."

"From the beginning, a group of members have joined together and has been described, by whom I don't know, as 'dissidents'," the cardinal continued.

After marriage was redefined to include same-sex couples in New York, Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan is warning that this step could lead to a further redefinition that accepts multiple partners and infidelity.

The New York City archbishop said that in recent decades, the Church has been a prophetic voice warning that no-fault divorce, contraception, cohabitation and promiscuity would lead to "a cheapening of the marriage bond and harm our kids."

"And now we ring the steeple bell again at this latest dilution of the authentic understanding of marriage, worried that the next step will be another redefinition to justify multiple partners and infidelity," he said.

The archbishop surveyed the effects of the June 24 passage of New York's same-sex "marriage" law in a July 7 post on his official blog, "The Gospel in the Digital Age."

In an apparent response to the argument advanced in the New York Times and elsewhere that the Church shrank from openly fighting the legislation in his state, Archbishop Dolan said he and his brother bishops "were on the frontiers" against the bill in their writings, sermons, personal lobbying, and interviews.

He said the bishops were also backed up "by indefatigable efforts" from the New York State Catholic Conference, ecumenical and inter-religious cooperation, and thousands of Catholic faithful.

Another Chinese episcopal ordination without the approval of Pope Benedict XVI is scheduled to take place within the next week, further straining relations between the Holy See and China's government.

Fr. Joseph Huang Binzhuang is to be ordained as bishop of Shantou diocese in the southern province of Guangdong on Thursday July 14, the Asian Catholic news agency UCA News reported July 8.

Chinese authorities are reportedly pressuring the four other Catholic bishops in Guangdong to attend the ceremony.

The news comes only days after the Vatican warned Catholic churchmen that they could face excommunication for their participation in another illicit episcopal ordination in the Diocese of Leshan last month.

"Our bishop has expressed to the officials he is unwilling to go as the ordination is not approved by the Vatican and the consecrating bishops of the Leshan ordination are facing severe punishment," one local source told UCA News.

"The officials told our bishop not to worry as the government will back him and he is not alone because several other bishops will also participate," he said.

Meanwhile, in the northeast Diocese of Liaoning, priests have voted to block their Bishop, Paul Pei Junmin, from attending the Shantou bishop's ordination.

In the statement published on July 6, Cardinal Policarpo said, "Reactions to this interview have forced me to look at this issue with greater care, and I realized that I provoked them, above all because I did not take into sufficient account the latest statements of the Magisterium on this issue."

The cardinal said that review led him to clearly explain his position "as bishop and pastor of the People of God."

Cardinal Policarpo's statement comes after a source at the Portuguese Bishops' Conference-who asked to remain unidentified because of the sensitivity of the situation-told CNA the cardinal does not in fact support the ordination of women, although "he was not accurate in speaking about the priesthood during a recent interview."

The source clarified that the reports claiming that the Patriarch of Lisbon is a supporter of women's ordination are based on "deliberately selective excerpts from an interview that in itself was unclear.""

In a July 1 column for First Things, Archbishop Chaput wrote that the court's June 27 ruling "extends and elevates the individual's right to free expression - or in this case, a corporation's right to make a healthy profit - at the expense of family sovereignty, the natural rights of parents and the intent of the Constitution's authors."

The decision in the case of "Brown vs. EMA" struck down a California law that banned minors from buying or renting violent video games.

"The head of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and other bishops previously in communion with the Pope are facing excommunication for ordaining a bishop without Vatican approval.

'Fr. Lei Shiyin, ordained without the papal mandate and hence illegitimately, has no authority to govern the diocesan Catholic community,' the Vatican said in a July 4 communique, adding, 'and the Holy See does not recognize him as the bishop of the Diocese of Leshan.'

The Vatican press office stated that the Leshan ordination had 'deeply saddened the Holy Father, who wishes to send to the beloved faithful in China a word of encouragement and hope, inviting them to prayer and unity.'" -Read More...

"Nearly 80 percent of pregnant teenage girls in Spain choose to continue their pregnancies when they receive the necessary support and counseling, reported the Red Madre Foundation.

The director of the foundation, Carmina Garcia-Valdes, told reporters that since Spain's new abortion law took effect one year ago, there has been a 45 percent increase in the number of teenage girls who have sought her organization's assistance.

The foundation has helped more than 6,000 women choose life since it was founded in 2007." -Read More...

"Archbishop José Gomez of Los Angeles has called upon California lawmakers to reject two bills that “represent a dangerous government intrusion into parents’ rights.”

The first would permit children 12 or over to obtain the HPV vaccination and treatment related to sexually transmitted diseases without parental consent. “By passing this bill, in effect, government would be encouraging young people to engage in activities that are contrary to their parents’ moral values--and then to lie about it or keep it secret from their parents,” said Archbishop Gomez.

The second bill, which has passed the legislature and awaits the governor’s signature, requires schools to use textbooks that “accurately portray” the “contributions” of “lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Americans.”" -Read More...

Father John Corapi's religious order has found him guilty of substance abuse, sexual activity and violating his promise of poverty.

A July 5 press release from the Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity (SOLT) said that while Fr. Corapi was involved in public ministry he had 'sexual relations and years of cohabitation with a woman known to him, when the relationship began, as a prostitute.'

The investigative team also found that he 'repeatedly abused alcohol and drugs,' 'recently engaged in 'sexting' activity with one or more women in Montana,' and holds legal title 'to over $1 million in real estate, numerous luxury vehicles, motorcycles, an ATV, a boat dock, and several motor boats.'

His religious order said it is concerned 'Fr. Corapi is now misleading (many) individuals through his false statements and characterizations.'

'It is for these Catholics that SOLT, by means of this announcement, seeks to set the record straight.'" -Read More...